Cakewalk
Pro Audio v. 6 -8 update: The Staff View snap problem has finally been fixed in v.8!!!! In
v. 6 and 7, only the appearance of the "snap" icon changed.

Staff View (see screen shot below) is in one way the most powerful view
in Cakewalk sequencers -- it is the only graphics view which lets you view and
edit the contents of more than one MIDI track at a time. While you can include as many
tracks as you want in the Cakewalk Event list, the Event List is, let's face it, a data
dump, not a graphics view. Some sequencers, for example Mark of The Unicorn Freestyle,
display multiple tracks in a single piano roll or controller pane. Events are color-coded
so you can tell which tracks they belong to. But most Cakewalk views display contents of
only one track, and so Staff View is often your only alternative to having a large number
of open windows on screen.

Cakewalk's automatic scrolling does not give you a way to lock the scrolling of
different windows to one another, making it inconvenient to use them together and adding
to the burden on Staff View in Cakewalk.

You have to read and write music to use Staff View. I consider that unfortunate. Many
fine musicians do not use notation, one reason among others that a multiple-track display
should be available in other views besides Staff View. A well-designed sequencer should,
by its design, teach users how to use its tools, including notation. The
disorganized proliferation of windows in Cakewalk does nothing to help with this. Users
would pick up notation quite easily if, for example, Piano Roll and Staff views could be
made to scroll together.

I get the impression that Cakewalk developers think of Staff View mostly as an output
mode, to provide some of the functionality of a music publishing program. Staff view is
useful for output, even though, as Cakewalk manuals admit, it does not compete with
dedicated notation software.

But then, it doesn't have to. If you want to prepare a score for performers, there are
several fine notation programs available. My complaint is not with Cakewalk Staff View's
inability to display and respond to the entire kitchen drawerful of notational symbols. As
long as you are preparing a performance on MIDI instruments rather than parts for
musicians to read, the details of musical nuance can be handled much better in a
sequencer than in a notation program. A sequencer stores, edits and controls nuance
precisely, as MIDI data, rather than as symbols whose interpretation depends on the skill,
rehearsal time and memory of performers.

The meat and potatoes of Staff View -- note pitch and timing -- are, on the
other hand, extremely important in a sequencer. This is because a composer or arranger
needs to use Staff View as a data entry and editing mode. No other view makes it
possible to visualize the relationship among musical voices a tenth as well. In Staff
View, the skeleton of a musical composition or arrangement can be assembled, and seen in
its entirety. Even if Piano Roll View showed multiple tracks, Staff View would still be
more compact, and would still show some things much more clearly than a piano roll can.

The dynamics hairpins and enharmonic note spelling in newer versions of Cakewalk are
nice, but for composers and arrangers, they are far less important than pitch and duration
of notes. And there is a very serious problem with the way notes are handled in Staff
View. Let's call it by it's right name. It is a bug.What is worse, it is a bug which is
intentionally designed into Cakewalk's Staff View by some busy bee software developer.

It is described on the Pro Audio version 5 Staff View help screen: The
Snap amount resets automatically to match notehead size and event type. There's a
longer explanation in the manual: "The snap amount ...resets automatically when notes
are clicked or the notehead size button changes, in order to match legal note positions
for that notehead size."

Ouch! This logic is completely backward. Notation should change to reflect the
timing of notes, not the other way around. Cakewalk can snap correctly in Staff
View, but only if you use some undocumented tricks. The most obvious, but unsatisfactory
one, is to disable snap entirely and give up any control at all over timing of
note starts.

Snap as it exists now in Staff View is as much a terrible frustration as a
useful feature. The snap function ought to work the same in Staff View as in
Piano Roll View: a note start should snap to the nearest point at the chosen snap
resolution, independent of note duration. At present, Staff View will not let you
graphically enter or edit a legato (full duration) quarter note as two tied eighth notes
in 4/4 time. There are similar problems with other note durations.

Staff view will let you enter a note at any pitch, but during drag and drop moves, it
corrects pitches to those of the key signature. Is it wrong to use
an E flat in the key of C major? Everyone from Buxtehude to the Beatles does. Well, at
least, you can drag the pitch back where you want it. You can't do that with the timing
"corrections."

The thinking that went into Staff View pretty clearly was: Oh, wow, Cakewalk
users are going to LOVE me, because now they will always get the Right Notes,
Right On the Beat. Right On!

Why does this insanity persist through one upgrade after another? Excuse me for being
impatient, but the "corrections" are so unmusical, so downright weird
-- and so different from the correct operation of the snap function in Cakewalk's
Piano Roll View -- that I couldn't help asking (or speculating).

The Staff View "corrections" frequently make drag and drop editing unusable.
Before dragging a note, you have to stop and think whether it will jump away from the
mouse pointer, forcing you to use the parameters dialog box instead of the mouse. More
about that parameters dialog box later...

There are ways to fool Cakewalk into correct "snap" behavior in Staff View.
I'll show you three of them.

Here's number 1:

Change the denominator of the time signature to the snap resolution you
want: for example, change 4/4 to 16/16 or 32/32.

In the following example, the first measure is in 4/4, and the quarter note at the
beginning (shown in pink) can only be dragged to the three other positions shown, on the
beat. The 16/16 time signature in the second measure makes it possible to drag the quarter
note to any 16th of the measure, as the remaining notes in pink show. A note can even tie
across a bar line, like the last note shown. If you set the time signature to 32/32, you
can move notes to start at any 32nd of the measure.

This trick does lead to the display of extra vertical ruler lines in Piano Roll,
Controllers and Tempo views. The lines can be visually annoying, though they may actually
help with aligning notes and controller messages. Don't change the length of the measures
t when you change the time signature, so you won't run into the problems I described in my
article on key and meter changes. When you're done editing, you
can change the time signature back to the normal one.

The trick was simple. You don't have to learn to program in the Cakewalk Application
Language (CAL) in order to solve this one. Whew.

A second trick:

In Cakewalk version 4 and later, use the selection arrow instead of dragging notes
with the pencil tool. Select the notes you want to drag, either by dragging a box
around them or by clicking on the first note and control-clicking on additional notes.
They will turn pink, as shown in the example at the right.

Now you can place the arrow on any of the pink note heads and drag all of the notes
together. The snap resolution depends on which note head you drag. In the example, I
dragged on the eighth note, allowing me to move the notes by an eighth note. If I had
dragged on the quarter note, I could have dragged only by quarter notes. You may want to
add a dummy note of a shorter resolution if you can't drag in the increment you want.

As long as you drag only horizontally, accidentals like the Bb in the example will be
preserved, too. But if you drag vertically, they will be "corrected."

If the note or notes you wish to move don't let you drag by the amount you want, add a
dummy note that does, and remove it after completing the move.

But beware!!!! Moving notes using the selection arrow only moves
controller messages if you select the entire time segment or clip in which the notes occur
(in the top ruler of Staff View or in Track View). Be careful to do this to avoid
controller messages out of sync with the notes.

Worse, dragging a selection Staff View sometimes erases everything else in the
track in the time segment the notes occupy before, after and during the move.
You can see the other notes disappear in staff view, but insidiousky, controller messages,
which you can not see in Staff View, are also erased. Cakewalk gives you no warning about
the material it is erasing.

How do you stop the unwanted deletions?Choose Drag and Drop
Options in the Settings menu, and set this to "blend old and new." This
will make the notes move properly, without deleting other notes. But still beware: The
"blend" setting can interleave controller messages from the original location
and new location of the notes you are moving, causing rapid, wild fluctuations in the
sound. Either make sure there are no conflicting controller messages, or select only
the notes, leaving all the controller messages where they were. You may have to touch them
up later, for example if you left behind a notebend that goes with one of the notes you
moved. Alternatively, you could move the note and its controller messages to another track
forced to a different MIDI channel. Unfortunately, MIDI gives you only one controller setting per channel, a problem I describe
in another article on this site.

The easiest way to keep track of what is happening with the controllers is to look in
Track View, which shows a miniature display of any controller messages. Listen to the
results of what you have done, and be ready to use Cakewalk's mercifully generous
multi-level Undo command.

And here's the third and final trick:

Change the durations of notes before dragging them, then use the pencil tool. This
trick is most efficient if you apply it to many notes at a time using the Length function.
If notes don't completely fill the time allotted to them, they will drag properly. There
is a potential problem with this approach: roundoff errors can accumulate as you shorten
notes and lengthen them again. Then you may run into the unison
cutoff problem. If you change the durations to 80 percent and lengthen them back to
125 percent, roundoff errors will be minimal, since 80 percent is the exact inverse of 125
percent.

Some of the problems you encounter in Staff View result from the difference between
standard music notation and the way the MIDI protocol works. The most common of these
problems is the unison cutoff problem described in
another article on this site. The unison cutoff problem would be less annoying if the
Cakewalk documentation explained it, and even less annoying if the Cakewalk software
solved it for you.

There are, however, several problems which result directly from the design of the
Cakewalk Staff View.

In Staff View, you can select note duration graphically using command buttons, but only
for fixed, standard durations. The command buttons do not "float" near the
cursor, but often require a long mouse move to the top of the screen. In a Staff View with
multiple tracks, the moves are much longer than in the example. Wouldn't it be nice to
have the command buttons in a context-sensitive dialog box that you could pop up with a
right mouse click? It also would be nice to have the toolbar reshape itself to fit in the
window. The toolbar runs off the right edge, even with the rather wide window shown here.
It's worse with the narrower window at the beginning of this article. Windows 95 makes it
easy to program floating toolbars. In keeping with the long mouse moves, our notated
example below honors a famous mouse.

By the way, the insertion of lyrics in Cakewalk works very well indeed. That's to be
expected from a company that, oddly (though this is typical in the music software
industry) uses the word "songs" to describe all music its customers might
create, including, presumably, music with no vocal part at all.

It would be nice to have the toolbar reshape itself to fit in the window. Even in the
rather wide window shown here, the toolbar runs off the right edge, With a narrower window
at the beginning of this article, many of the tools become unavailable

A trick:

You can select a duration for a new note by first clicking on an existing note
which has the duration you want. This can save you a lot of long mouse moves.

Once you have placed a note, there is no way to change its duration graphically in
Cakewalk Staff View. You can do this in the notation screens of many other music software
products -- for example, by note heads' growing horizontal "tails" that you can
drag with the computer mouse. In Cakewalk, you can change note durations graphically in
Piano Roll View, but in Staff View, you must do it numerically in the Note Properties
dialog box.

The Note Properties dialog box is a perfect example of a graphics interface subverted
to non-graphic ends. It would be nice to click on note shapes to change note durations,
but instead, you must enter the new duration in "ticks." Using ticks, while
sometimes necessary to define nonstandard durations, is slow, a throwback to the
era of 1950's event-list sequencing. Keep a pocket calculator on your desk -- it's faster
than switching to the Windows calculator.

The duration of a note can be changed in eighth-note increments (30 ticks, at the usual
120 ticks per quarter note) by right-clicking on the up or down arrow next to the
numerical data entry window. The starting time changes by one full beat (120 ticks) if you
right-click. This is inconsistent, and inconvenient -- you have to hold down the left
button a long time to get through 60 ticks to the middle of the beat. This problem would
best be solved with the clickable note shapes I have suggested.

One thing notation can do that a piano roll can't is to identify tuplets clearly. In a
piano roll, you see only the raw note durations. Since musical notation represents note
timing symbolically and spatially, Staff View shows the metric structure which
underlies the durations. This makes it easier to enter tuplets in Staff View, easier to
check your work and easier to understand the tuplets later.

Have a look at the toolbar in the example at the left. The only tuplet number on it
(currently selected) is a 3. Cakewalk does not allow graphic entry of tuplets beyond
triplets, and does not display tuplets beyond triplets properly in Staff View. This is one
of Cakewalk's major weaknesses for the composer or arranger. As I have pointed out in another article, many tuplets can't even be created with
the Length and Fit functions. You have to calculate numbers of "ticks" in your
head or by hand and enter the timing of each note numerically. Keep the pocket calculator
ready. If you are into CAL programming, you could write a CAL routine to create tuplets.
But why should you have to do this, given the capabilities of today's graphics interfaces?

Here's something that is correct about
Staff View, but it will confuse you because it is wrong in other views. (This problem has
been corrected in v. 7. One more reason to upgrade.)

Measure numbers in Staff View (see screen shot above) and
Track View are at the beginning of the measure. That's standard musical practice,
so you can easily locate the downbeat. Measure numbers in Piano Roll, Controllers and
Tempo views are, incorrectly and inconveniently, in the middle of the measure. If
you aren't careful, you will find yourself offsetting notes and controller/tempo messages
by half a measure. You have been warned.

And here's a strange little bug. If you open a new
file, enter notes in Staff View and then cut or delete all of them, Staff View disappears
-- poof! just when you want to use it to start over. You have to open Staff View
again to enter more notes. (This does not happen in other views, one more inconsistency
between the behavior of Staff View and the others). This little bug appears to reflect the
concept that empty time is not part of the music, which is discussed at more length in my
article on delete/cut glitches.

Since we've mentioned tuplets, let's begin the dreamer's wish list with them. I
would like to see the triplets function taken out of the row of note value
buttons and placed in a tuplets dialog box with values of 2 (default),
3,5,7,9,11, 13 and perhaps higher. The tuplets function would simply change the
snap points and note durations. This approach would save a lot of
number-crunching on the hand calculator by banishing the present crippling limitations to
graphical note entry (no tuplets except triplets, no rests within triplets, no ties in or
out).

A tuplets dialog box is all that would be needed for easy graphic entry of
any tuplet so it would play correctly. Displaying tuplets correctly in Staff View would be
more complicated, to be sure, since the tuplet number is not stored as MIDI data. For
correct display of all tuplets, Cakewalk would have to generate Staff View from specially
stored information rather than from MIDI note timing data. But as I said before, for the
purpose of MIDI performance, pretty staff notation is much less important than easy data
entry.

An extremely useful feature in Staff View, as in Piano Roll View, would be display of
different tracks with the notes in different colors. Staff View already displays three
colors to indicate selection status and whether a note is active. Now, imagine if you
could display the six tracks from a guitar controller on one staff, and color coding would
show you which string was playing which note. Other uses for colors would be in putting
several parts for different instruments on one staff, and for microtonal MIDI instruments
that have more than 12 pitches per musical octave..

Finally, Staff View often just doesn't let you see enough. It takes only one 32nd note
to expand a measure in 4/4 time beyond what an 800 x 600- pixel screen can hold. It would
be nice to have a way to zoom Staff View, as is possible with Piano Roll View and
Controllers View. Having 32nd notes crowded just wouldn't be much of a problem when
editing.Widths in Staff View and Piano Roll View might even be matched so they scroll
together. It would also be nice to be able to chain several staff lines one
above another so they would scroll upwards during playback and show an extended section of
music. And it would also be nice to be able to stop the automated scrolling when you are
trying to loop and edit a section of music slightly wider than your monitor's screen.
And...

Well, I am dreaming. Cakewalk developers, how about starting with the obvious,
embarrassing stuff like the problem with the "snap" function?